The Politics of Paul, Pt. 6

Paul’s gospel, then, is thoroughly political, but not “political” according to the corrupted status quo of what we call politics in our 21st century American culture. Paul doesn’t call for the church to try to agitate for power and influence, and certainly wouldn’t tolerate rhetorically denouncing other people or fellow Christians in the name of differing party loyalties. In Paul’s view, God is making all things new through Jesus Christ and through him alone. God is working out his purposes in and through the church, pouring out his blessing on his people as they seek to faithfully embody the broken-hearted love of God for all people. So, some practical implications for contemporary church practice:

First, a lesson from Saul the Pharisee. He had a mind and heart more thoroughly saturated by Scripture than anyone currently alive. His aims and ambitions were completely oriented by God’s agenda! Or so he thought. It’s all too easy, once our passions are aroused, for us to distort Scripture, to see in the Bible what we want to see, and to have our notions of the ideal society shaped by cultural prejudices or other cultural voices than by God’s agenda. And it’s all too easy, driven by growing anger, to adopt a cultural mode of violence and coercion—even if it’s only verbal and rhetorical, and not physical. We can deceive ourselves into thinking that we’re advocates for God’s agenda, but instead be in serious need of political repentance. Just as Saul converted from a politics of violence and coercion, Christian people must resist the temptation to rhetorical, verbal, and most certainly physical violence. We must develop and foster practices of gracious speech and other skills associated with peace-making.

Second, when it comes to politics, Christian people ought to think first of their church, its internal networks of relationships and its postures toward outsiders. For Christians, politics has to do with how we conduct ourselves in our churches and how our churches relate redemptively toward outsiders.

Third, our Christian identity, our loyalty to Jesus and those in our church, far outstrips any earthly affiliation and especially national political party identification. While Christians differ over policies and political ideologies, we ought to celebrate our common participation in the life of God in Christ by the Spirit.

Fourth, we must reconsider what is shaping our imaginations. Through whose eyes are we seeing the world and our national situation? Cable news? Newspapers? Talk radio? Politically-charged web-sites? Are they so stirring us up with anger that we speak of this or that political figure derisively and in angry terms? Do our stirred-up passions drive us to think, act, and speak like non-Christians? Let’s have minds and hearts shaped by Scripture, oriented by hope in the coming Kingdom of God. Let’s set our hearts and minds on eternal things, on that Kingdom that is to come and which is already here in power. And let’s reconsider our words, and treat people as if we truly are followers of Jesus.

Fifth, when it comes to political action, let’s indeed get involved! But let’s think first about the efforts of our local bodies of Jesus-followers acting among our wider communities and neighborhoods. How can we get involved in practical ways to bless our local communities in the name of Jesus? We are to be communities of shalom and justice and self-giving love, rather than coercion and quests for power and influence, making demands that others meet our standards or become like us.

We can talk all we want about how policies should be different regarding immigration and local economics. But, whether you identify yourself as a Republican or Democrat, or whether you’re a conservative or a liberal, here’s just one practical suggestion for embodying the servant-shaped posture of Jesus toward the world.

Thinking especially of our situation here in West Michigan, why not get to know the leaders of local migrant worker communities and offer to help them figure out how to get legally documented? Do immigrant communities fear for their children or have trouble getting integrated in their schools? We can be advocates on behalf of those who are strangers and who live in fear. If we did, we would manifest the character of God.

Listen to what the God of Israel says to his people:

“You shall not wrong a stranger or oppress him, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt. You shall not afflict any widow or orphan. If you afflict him at all, and if he does cry out to Me, I will surely hear his cry; and My anger will be kindled, and I will kill you with the sword, and your wives shall become widows and your children fatherless (Exodus 22:21-24).

God hasn’t changed. That is still his heart, and we can embody the character of that God in our social practices, acting as the polis of Jesus in our wider communities.

What if your church initiated an effort as advocates for immigrants? I can tell you right now it would be difficult. Strangers are . . . strange! It would mean sacrifice, re-orienting your lives, changing community patterns, getting to know people with whom you’re not comfortable – all behaviors that just might help us get over our constant complaints that our church communities are stagnant and complacent and lacking in excitement. Solve the problem. Get to know someone in need. He just make you draw upon God’s grace and ignite your heart with God’s own love with which he loves the alien and the stranger. And if they ask why you’re doing what you’re doing, you can tell them that you’re acting in the name of Jesus Christ so that you yourself can be pressed more deeply into the heart of the One who gave his life so that the world might truly live.

Well, there are so many more practical ways of living out Paul’s political vision, but I’ll leave it to you and your creativity to come up with those.

During this election season, you ought to consider well what candidate to vote for, and you ought to vote. But whether you’re Democrat, Republican, Libertarian or Green, you should also be aware that voting is only one among a limitless range of options for Christian political behavior—and there are many others that are far more effective, life-transforming, and community-enlivening, and that serve to manifest the Lordship of Jesus Christ over all things.

Jesus was asked twice about which one is the “Most Important Commandment.” Both times, (Matthew 22 & Mark 12) Jesus immediately gave a straight, direct, specific answerer, speaking in complete sentences, quoting the same chapter of the Law of Moses (Deuteronomy 6).

Jesus didn’t make up His own “new commandment” on the spot, He didn’t quote Himself, and He certainly didn’t quote Paul or any other part of our “New Testament.”

There are MANY applications to this most important commandment.
Yes Jesus also spoke of the essential Second Commandment, (Leviticus 19)
and yes there is a unique connection and interrelationship between these commandments,
and yes knowing them is not enough, we must apply them.
Yes.
But before we discuss application, we should know what these 2 commandments are, that they are 2 different commandments, and which one is The Most Important. Wouldn’t you agree?

Poem – What is love?

Two men came to Jesus
With different motivations.
They asked Him the same question
Relevant to all the nations:

Which is the Most Important?
The answer was the same.
Jesus did not manipulate
He was not there to play a game.

“Love the Lord your God” said Jesus
as He quoted from The Law –
to fulfill and not abolish
was His purpose, full of awe.

Jesus did not make all Scripture
Into one new great commandment.
He summarized The Law and Prophets
“First and Greatest” and “The Second.”

The Love of God is higher
Than the love of any man.
Receive from God, give back to God-
Then to others, that’s His plan.

The Love of God involves much more
Than simply “love your fellow man.”
Worship, trust, and pray to God,
and obey Him – that’s His plan

To worship and pray to neighbors,
Whoever they may be,
Or trust and obey our enemies
Would be idolatry.

The love of God is first and greatest,
And the love of man is second.
“All we need is love” are words
of dead Beetles on the pavement.

“The entire law is summed up in a single command”
are not the words of Jesus our Salvation.
It’s false teaching of Paul the Pharisee
an “accuser of our brethren.”

“Love” without God is Satan’s word through Paul
in his chapter to the Corinthians.
“I will show you the most excellent way”
is the road to eternal perdition.

Where is God in Paul’s chapter on love?
Nowhere in view of the eye.
Paul sings about himself like a Mexican Mariachi
“I, I, I, I.”

Jesus is The Most Excellent Way
Not the words of a Pharisee.
The words of Jesus are very clear.
Jesus said, “You must follow ME.”

Thanks, Tim for this series. Really good stuff. I come at this from more or less an Anabaptist perspective, so that it’s easier for me to see the part the church plays through God’s grace and kingdom come in Jesus than how I’m to vote in an American election, which for me is hard. Thanks so much for sharing this.